Sunday, June 30, 2013

Teammates become foes in inaugural Military Bowl all-star football game

With the talent assembled in Middletown the past two weeks, a group that will be on display Saturday at Rentschler Field, practices have reminded Chris Silvestri more of college football than the leadup to a high school senior all-star game.

"With all the coaches, all the players together, we've jelled really nicely. It's surprising, the camaraderie in just eight days." said Silvestri, an assistant at New Canaan and for the National Guard team at Saturday's Military Bowl and Hall of Fame Football Classic.

"The game's going to be competitive. We want to win. We've got competitive kids, competitive coaches. It's going to be a great game."

Practices started last week, the National Guard team at Xavier, the Marines team at Middletown.

The game, presented by the Connecticut High School Coaches Association, used to pit Connecticut's best against Rhode Island's in the Governors' Cup. That game, as well as the New Haven County vs. Fairfield County Hall of Fame Classic, were disccontinued and replaced with this new format.

The coaches, Windsor's Rob Fleeting for the Marines and Ledyard's Jim Buonocore for the Guard, drafted their teams from the pool of players.

Nine schools have at least one player on both sides, including St. Joseph, West Haven and Woodland. It has been a fun twist.

"You look at Twitter, everybody's talking smack with each other," said Bassick's Derrick Lewis, an assistant for the Marines team, "especially the Hillhouse and West Haven guys. It's all in good sport. It's a tremendous game for a tremendous cause."

Fairfield Warde coach Duncan DellaVolpe, another assistant on the National Guard team, has gotten a kick out of the Windsor players on his side, who'll go up against not only seven teammates but a couple of their coaches.

"We're trying to figure out as much as we can about the personnel on the other side," DellaVolpe added with a laugh.

Coaches and players have been learning not just about the opposition but about their own new teammates, and learning from each other, too.

"It's been impressive to see the Xavier kids in person. I never get to see them too much," DellaVolpe said. "Timmy Boyle, that's a heck of a quarterback UConn's got.

"It's good to see (St. Joseph receiver) Jake Pelletier against this kind of competition. He's been lights-out for us."

Southwestern Connecticut, the FCIAC in particular, isn't as well-represented as these coaches would like.

"I really think the buzz we'll gain from this, we're going to bring back the Fairfield-New Haven game," Lewis said.

"This is not going to be enough. ... Once (young players) see this game, they're going to wish they had a chance to play in it."

Silvestri has enjoyed coaching players from around the state. He has especially enjoyed being on the same side with Windsor defensive back Terrell Huff, whose team faced New Canaan in the past two Class L playoffs.

"It's been fantastic. They're all all-stars, right?" Silvestri said. "They're the best Connecticut has right now."

mfornabaio@ctpost.com; http://twitter.com/fornabaioctp; http://blog.connpost.com/fornabaio

Source: http://www.newstimes.com/highschool/article/Teammates-become-foes-in-inaugural-Military-Bowl-4636675.php

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Marijuana legalization: The blustery crosscurrents of change

Marijuana legalization: Colorado Springs is among the cities debating whether to allow retail sales of marijuana for recreational use. New Hampshire may soon be the 19th state to support marijuana legalization for medical use.

By David Clark Scott,?Staff writer / June 29, 2013

A medical marijuana plant is shown at a dispensary in Seattle in November last year.

Ted S. Warren/AP/File

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When it comes to marijuana legalization, the pot-scented winds of change are blustery. It's sometimes hard to read the prevailing winds.

Skip to next paragraph David Clark Scott

Online Director

David Clark Scott leads a small team at CSMonitor.com that?s part Skunkworks, part tech-training, part journalism.

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Eighteen states have legalized the use of marijuana for medical use. New Hampshire looks likely to be come No. 19. Last November, voters in Colorado and Washington took legalization a step further by approving the use of cannabis for recreational use.

But the new Colorado law allows every municipality to regulate retail sales of marijuana for recreational use ? or opt out. On Thursday, some 60 residents turned out for a Colorado Springs City Council meeting held to give residents an opportunity to share their views. And if this meeting is any indication, the debate on marijuana legalization continues at the local level.

The Gazette in Colorado Springs reported:

"Selling marijuana in retail stores could lead to more traffic crashes and fatalities, said Colorado Springs Police Chief Pete Carey. On the other hand, selling marijuana could boost the economy with jobs and sales tax revenue. For every point there was a counterpoint as residents in a standing-room only hall waited patiently to speak."

The new state law requires each city to decide on whether to allow marijuana sales ? or not ? by Oct. 1. Colorado Springs City Council member Jan Martin said they expect to make a decision by July 23.

So far, 34 Colorado cities and counties have banned retail marijuana sales; 25 cities or counties have put a moratorium on sales and will take action at a later date, said Ms. Martin, according to The Gazette.

Rosemary Harris Lytle, president of the NAACP Colorado/Montana/Wyoming State Conference, spoke out in favor of Colorado Springs retail sales. The NAACP endorsed Colorado's Amendment 64, "because of the impact of incarceration on young men and women of color," she said. "We know from our research that possessing a joint has great impact on the lives of young people."

Similarly, on June 25 the NAACP came out in favor of a bill allowing recreational use of marijuana in Pennsylvania.

The NAACP says that the war on drugs in America unfairly targets minorities and that there is a ?staggeringly disproportionate? arrest rate compared with white drug users, according to The Patriot News.

?The war on drugs is a catastrophic failure,? said David Scott, chair of the Legal Redress Committee for the Cheltenham Area Branch of the NAACP and a former deputy chief of police. Scott cited an ACLU study that sees a racial bias in the prosecution of marijuana users.

While the Pennsylvania marijuana legalization bill is not expected to pass, it's indicative of how the issue continues to roil.

This past week, the New Hampshire legislature passed a bill that would make it the 19th state to allow for medical marijuana use.

The Associated Press reports that "the bill allows patients diagnosed with cancer, Crohn's disease and other conditions to possess up to 2 ounces of marijuana obtained from one of four dispensaries authorized by the state. To qualify for medical marijuana, a person would have to have been a patient of the prescribing doctor for at least 90 days, have tried other remedies and have exhibited certain symptoms. Only New Hampshire residents would qualify.

The [new New Hampshire] dispensaries could have a maximum of 80 marijuana plants, 160 seedlings and 80 ounces of marijuana or 6 ounces per qualifying patient. They also would have a limit of three mature cannabis plants, 12 seedlings and 6 ounces for each patient who designates the dispensary as a treatment center."

New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan has said she will sign the bill into law.

Meanwhile, in California, where medical marijuana use has been legal since 1996, the state's Supreme Court ruled in May that cities and counties can ban medical marijuana dispensaries. A few weeks later, Los Angeles voters approved a ballot measure that limits the number of pot shops in the city to 135, down from an estimated high of about 1,000. And earlier this month, federal authorities in California began?a crackdown on some 100 pot clinics in Los Angeles County.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Wx6D_5It63c/Marijuana-legalization-The-blustery-crosscurrents-of-change

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Danica Patrick fires back at Kyle Petty comments

SPARTA, Ky. (AP) ? Danica Patrick doesn't care that Kyle Petty thinks she's better at getting attention than driving because she's heard it all before.

But if Petty's going to attack her, the NASCAR Sprint Cup rookie believes he should at least get his facts straight.

On Friday, Patrick responded to Petty's comments a night earlier on Speed's "Race Hub" program, in which the former Sprint Cup driver called her a "marketing machine" rather than a race car driver. Petty also doubted that Patrick would become a driver and insisted that she doesn't race as well as she qualifies.

Patrick's statistics suggest otherwise. On average she's finishing almost six spots higher (25.8) than she starts (32nd), which she noted by saying, "those who watch know I can't qualify for crap. The race goes much better."

That likely won't stop Petty, the 53-year-old son of seven-time Cup champion Richard Petty and an eight-time race winner on NASCAR's premier circuit, from criticizing Patrick.

Now an analyst for TNT and Fox/Speed, Petty has periodically taken jabs at Patrick, a former IndyCar Series driver who now drives the No. 10 Chevy for Stewart-Haas Racing. The 31-year-old Patrick is 27th in points in her first full Cup season, which follows an open wheel career highlighted by a fuel-mileage victory in 2008 in Motegi, Japan.

On Thursday night, Petty seemed to elaborate on his views during the show. While he understands the mass appeal of Patrick, who has been featured in racy TV ads for sponsor Go Daddy and was IndyCar's most popular driver for several years, her driving skills don't justify the hype in his opinion.

"That's where I have a problem, where fans have bought into the hype of the marketing, to think she's a race car driver," he said. "She can go fast, and I've seen her go fast. She drives the wheels off it when she goes fast."

Asked if she has learned to race, Petty continued, "She's not a race car driver. There's a difference. The King always had that stupid saying, but it's true, 'Lots of drivers can drive fast, but very few drivers can race.' Danica has been the perfect example of somebody who can qualify better than what she runs. She can go fast, but she can't race."

Patrick won the pole and finished eighth in the season-opening Daytona 500 but has admittedly struggled this season. She said she's working toward that point where things level out but isn't there yet.

The main thing is keeping her team, sponsor and fans happy ? not giving a second thought to Petty's comments.

"I really don't care," she said during a news conference at Kentucky Speedway. "It's true that there are plenty of people who say bad things about me. I read them. People want me to die. At the end of the day, you get over that stuff and trust you are doing a good job."

Asked what it will take to quiet her critics, Patrick's response brought some laughs.

"Do you think I will silence my naysayers?" she asked. "You don't. I'm sure everybody has them. You know who believes in you. That's what matters."

Former boss Dale Earnhardt Jr. has shown his faith in Patrick, giving her a chance to transition to stock cars over three years in the Nationwide Series at JR Motorsports. Earnhardt defended Patrick and called her a tough competitor who works hard and said she wouldn't have a ride if she couldn't stay with the pack or finished last every week.

"I have to disagree with Kyle," Earnhardt said. "She has run some really good races. On every occasion she is outrunning several guys out on the circuit. If she was not able to compete, I think you might be able to say Kyle has an argument.

"But she's out there running competitively and running strong on several accounts. I think that she has got a good opportunity and a rightful position in the sport to keep competing and she just might surprise even Kyle Petty."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/danica-patrick-fires-back-kyle-petty-comments-210757697.html

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Williams doubts she'd win a point against Murray

Serena Williams of the United States serves to Caroline Garcia of France during their Women's second round singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Serena Williams of the United States serves to Caroline Garcia of France during their Women's second round singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Serena Williams of the United States reacts after scoring a point against Caroline Garcia of France during their Women's second round singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Serena Williams of the United States reacts during her Women's second round singles match against Caroline Garcia of France at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Serena Williams of the United States reacts after scoring a point against Caroline Garcia of France in their Women's second round singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Caroline Garcia of France returns to Serena Williams of the United States during their Women's second round singles match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

(AP) ? At the moment, no woman seems capable of providing much of a challenge to Serena Williams on a tennis court.

She's won 33 matches in a row, and 76 of her past 79. If she wins five more this fortnight, as almost everyone expects, Williams will earn a second consecutive Wimbledon title and 17th Grand Slam championship overall.

So how about playing an exhibition match against a man? Andy Murray, for example?

After Williams beat 100th-ranked qualifier Caroline Garcia of France 6-3, 6-2 to reach the third round at the All England Club, the first question at her news conference Thursday concerned a suggestion by Murray ? prompted by a fan's Twitter post ? that the pair of reigning Olympic and U.S. Open champions play each other.

"Really? He wants to play me? Is he sure?" Williams responded, laughing heartily. "That would be fun. I doubt I'd win a point, but that would be fun."

It might draw some attention, too, given the combined star power of Williams in the U.S. and Murray in Britain. Currently, she is No. 1 in the WTA rankings; he's No. 2 in the ATP rankings.

"He's probably one of the top three people I definitely don't want to play," Williams said. "But maybe we can have a little bit of a showdown. That would be fine. I get (to use the doubles) alleys. He gets no serves. I get alleys on my serves, too."

In a piece posted on www.bbc.co.uk on Thursday morning, Murray refers to the original tweet in which someone mentioned he should face Williams.

"I'd be up for it, why not?" Murray said. "I've never hit with her but she's an incredible player and people would be interested to see the men play against the women to see how the styles match up."

On Friday, Murray will stick to trying to become the first British man to win Wimbledon since Fred Perry, 77 years ago. Murray was scheduled to face 32nd-seeded Tommy Robredo of Spain on Centre Court, where the roof might be closed if the forecast for rain is accurate.

The only other British singles player still in the tournament, 19-year-old Laura Robson, was also supposed to be in the main stadium, playing Mariana Duque-Marino of Colombia in a match postponed Thursday because of the first drizzle of Week 1.

Others slated to play Friday, weather permitting, included French Open runner-up David Ferrer, 2011 Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova, and 17th-seeded Sloane Stephens of the United States.

While Williams, Stephens and others keep the Stars and Stripes flying in the women's draw, it's a different story in the men's singles, where for the first time in 101 years, zero men from the United States reached Wimbledon's third round. And the last time it happened, way back in 1912, no Americans even entered the oldest Grand Slam tournament.

It's a low moment for a country that produced Bill Tilden and Don Budge, John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors, Pete Sampras and Andre Agassi.

By the end of Thursday, all 11 U.S. men in the 2013 field at the All England Club were gone, with top-seeded Novak Djokovic accounting for the last one by beating 156th-ranked qualifier Bobby Reynolds 7-6 (2), 6-3, 6-1. Earlier in the day, former top-five player James Blake lost to Bernard Tomic of Australia 6-3, 6-4, 7-5, while qualifier Denis Kudla was beaten by Ivan Dodig of Croatia 6-1, 7-6 (4), 7-5.

That trio joined 18th-seeded John Isner, 21st-seeded Sam Querrey, Ryan Harrison, Steve Johnson, Alex Kuznetsov, Wayne Odesnik, Rajeev Ram and Michael Russell on the way home.

"It's a tough stat to hear, but I still believe, right now, where U.S. tennis is, not too many guys are in their prime," said Kudla. "That's why the numbers are like that. A lot of guys are in the tail end of their careers and a lot of guys are coming up. "Maybe next year, or the year after that, things could change. You have to go through a little bit of a struggle to get some success."

With 27 of 32 third-round spots in men's singles settled, 18 countries were represented, including Latvia, Ukraine, Croatia and South Africa. Five countries had multiple entrants left, led by four each for Spain and France.

___

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-28-TEN-Wimbledon/id-bf2faeaaf52c4d4a90d03f18e1f2fbd8

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2008 Ford Fusion SE from North America

This car has been rock solid since I have had it. I bought it and it felt new, and it still feels just like new. It has adequate acceleration, and yields respectable fuel economy, though not quite on par with other V6's in its class. I average about 25 mpg, and I drive fairly conservative with almost all being highway miles. The interior feels much more expensive than what you pay for. I test drove a 2009 Malibu before I bought this, and that interior was extremely cheap feeling in comparison; it was the LT1 trim so that could be why. Seats are very comfortable and you can easily drive long distances without feeling like you rear is going to break off.

I really enjoy the Sync system, since it is annoying to be holding onto a phone especially in traffic.

My only real complaint is the horrible handling in winter. I came from an AWD Subaru, so maybe I was babied, but this is seriously scary sometimes. I have never known a FWD car to fishtail on slippery surfaces as much as this car does (I've heard it has to do with the suspension). Also, it really struggles to get going too when there is a tiny amount of snow/slush on the roads, and I have new tires on. I really like this car, but I wouldn't get the FWD model again, especially since I live in an inclimate weather area.

No, it's not driver error either, since I have lived in snowy weather areas my entire life, and have gone through many other vehicles: 4x4, RWD, FWD, and AWD; this car just feels that unstable to me. I will be getting rid of it by next winter solely for this reason.

Source: http://www.carsurvey.org/reviews/ford/fusion/2008/

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Kim leads Park by 1 stroke at US Women's Open

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) ? No surprise that a South Korean leads the U.S. Women's Open after the first round, considering the country has produced the last four major champions.

Ha-Neul Kim was an unlikely candidate to be the one to shoot the low score Thursday at Sebonack. Her bogey-free, 6-under 66 put her a stroke ahead of top-ranked Inbee Park.

Park is trying to make history by winning the first three majors of the year. For a day at least, she was upstaged by her much less-heralded friend.

"I was very nervous coming in, and I thought in the practice round that the course was very difficult," Kim said through a translator. "Before playing today I thought that even par would be a very good score for me."

Currently a member of the KLPGA Tour, Kim is a seven-time winner in South Korea. She kept giving herself short birdie putts Thursday and making them.

"I'm enjoying myself," Kim said. "I'm just happy to be here and to be playing in this big event. I'm not really thinking about winning or results but enjoying the moment."

Kim birdied her second-to-last hole with daylight waning to claim the lead after Park held it for most of the day with her 67 in the morning session.

No player has won the first three majors in a season with at least four majors. The 2008 U.S. Women's Open champion, Park has already won five times this year, including her last two tournaments.

American Lizette Salas, Swedes Caroline Hedwall and Anna Nordqvist and South Korea's I.K. Kim shot 68.

Concerned about bad weather, tournament officials moved up the tees, and with the rain holding off, Park was able to play aggressively.

"I never had practiced from those tees, so I was a little bit shocked when I went to the tees," Park said.

Not that she was complaining.

She repeatedly set up short putts, and the way she has excelled in her short game lately, Park was headed to a low score.

"So instead of hitting like 5-irons, we were hitting 9-irons, and that was making the course much easier," she said. "I was actually able to go for some pins and give myself a lot of opportunities today. I made a lot of putts and didn't leave much out there."

Starting on No. 10, Park birdied her first hole then started racking up pars. She made the turn at 2 under before birdies on three of her next four holes.

At 5 under, Park briefly struggled with her tee shots, needing to save par on Nos. 5 and 7. On No. 6, her 15th hole of the day, she had to lay up out of the tall grass and settled for her lone bogey.

Park got back to 5 under on the par-5 eighth with a chip shot to about 5 feet that set up a birdie putt.

Hedwall and I.K. Kim were each at 5 under with a hole left, but closed with bogeys. Nordqvist birdied her last two holes to pull into the tie for third.

The two Swedes grew up playing together.

"Certainly seeing her shooting 4 under in the morning session gave me a little bit of inspiration for the afternoon," Nordqvist said.

Salas, a 23-year-old former Southern California star, played with Park in the last group of the final round of this year's Kraft Nabisco Championship. Three strokes back starting the day, she opened with a double bogey and tumbled to 25th after shooting a 79.

She bounced back to reach a playoff at the LPGA Lotte Championship in April, losing to Suzann Pettersen for her best finish on tour.

"I'm just getting a lot more used to being in contention and really studying the leaderboard and really managing my patience," Salas said. "I think that's been key for me this week. Yes, I still get nervous on the first tee and my hands keep shaking, but I just know that if I just trust myself and trust my instincts, I can perform out here."

Chile's Paz Echeverria, a 28-year-old LPGA Tour rookie also making her U.S. Women's Open debut, and Canada's Maude-Aimee Leblanc shot 69.

Among eight players at 70 was Natalie Gulbis, who withdrew from a tournament and missed two others earlier this year because of malaria. Infected by a mosquito during the LPGA Thailand in late February, she returned for the Kraft Nabisco in early April. Gulbis hasn't finished better than 13th since, missing the cut at the LPGA Championship.

Defending champion Na Yeon Choi, second-ranked Stacy Lewis and amateurs Kyung Kim and Brooke Henderson were among 11 players at 71.

Lydia Ko, the 16-year-old New Zealand amateur who won the Canadian Open last August to become the youngest LPGA Tour winner, had a 72. Juli Inkster, playing in a record-breaking 34th U.S. Women's Open at age 53, holed a 103-yard wedge shot for eagle on the 18th to also finish at 72.

Michelle Wie opened her round with a quadruple-bogey 8 on No. 10. She was at 11 over through 14 holes before birdies on three of the last four to finish with an 80.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kim-leads-park-1-stroke-us-womens-open-072905526.html

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Islamists, anti-Morsi protesters end week on alarming note

Five Egyptians were killed this week, making it unlikely Sunday's anti-Morsi protests will be calm.

By Louisa Loveluck,?Contributor / June 28, 2013

Supporters of Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi hold a rally in Cairo, Friday, June 28. Supporters and opponents of President Morsi clashed across Egypt today ending week on alarming note.

Manu Brabo/AP

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Supporters and opponents of President Mohamed Morsi clashed across Egypt today?as they steel themselves for mass demonstrations that are being hyped as one of the largest challenges yet to the Islamist president?s rule. The violence of the past few days make it more likely that Sunday, when the crowds are expected to be even larger, will take a dark turn.?

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Egypt?s leading religious authority called for calm as rival demonstrations on opposite sides of Cairo drew?hundreds of thousands and bloody clashes in Alexandria, Daqahliya, Gharbiya, Sharqiya brought the official death toll after a week of simmering tensions to five.

"Vigilance is required to ensure we do not slide into civil war," Al Azhar University declared in a statement which was broadly supportive of Egypt?s Islamist president's offer of dialogue earlier this week.?

The sentiments echo those of the country?s military, who said earlier this week that they were ready to prevent the country from going down the "dark tunnel" of internal conflict. ?Army tanks were deployed across Egyptian cities on Wednesday to secure state institutions as the protests burgeoned.

Experts say today?s violence suggests that bloody clashes are inevitable during mass demonstrations called for June 30, the one-year anniversary of Morsi's rule. But those who are planning to go out on the streets this weekend say this is not the case, and argue instead that Mr. Morsi?s removal would represent a peaceful resolution to a crisis of deepening political polarization.

In Alexandria today, one man was killed in clashes near the Muslim Brotherhood's local offices. According to the state MENA news agency, 60 more were injured. Unconfirmed reports from social media suggest that a number of other Islamist political offices were attacked this week in the country?s Delta governorates, north of Cairo.

Addressing a crowd of tens of thousands who had turned out to support President Morsi in Cairo?s Nasr District, Muslim cleric Sawfat Hegazy railed at the opposition for "using deadly force against Islamists and Brotherhood members.?

"The president must use an iron fist to reply to such attacks,? he said.

Protesters said they were vehemently opposed to the Tamarod ("Rebel") movement, the petition campaign which has led calls for Sunday?s anti-Morsi demonstration, and claims to have collected over 15 million signatures in favor of Morsi?s resignation.

The petitions hold no legal force, but they reveal widespread discontent at his government almost a year after the president took power and the signatories hope that alone will be enough to prompt Morsi to step down.?

?They told us they had 15 million signatures,? says Yasser Abdelazim, a member of Morsi?s Freedom and Justice Party. ?If this is the case, they can participate in elections, change the parliament, change the president.? An elected president should only be removed via the ballot box, he said.

But just 8.5 miles away in Cairo?s Tahrir Square, protesters who rallied ahead of protests planned for June 30 insisted that their demonstrations will go ahead as planned and that Morsi?s removal was the only way forward for the country. Although only a couple thousand gathered there during the day, crowds swelled as the evening drew in.

With anticipation mounting, opposition figures say that they expect an impressive turnout two days from now. ?I expect to see millions of Egyptians come out on the streets,? says Khaled Dawoud, a spokesman for the National Salvation Front, Egypt's coalition of secularist opposition parties.

?[Morsi] is refusing to acknowledge the number of problems that have come from his policies and the religious rhetoric of his group, and this makes me and our supporters more personally committed to go out on the streets on June 30th. We will be peaceful; we will wait it out.?

But experts warn that the clashes witnessed this week are creating a dynamic that makes?violence increasingly likely.

?Expectation of violence itself can increase the likelihood of it happening,? says Elijah Zarwan, a senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. ?People from both sides are coming to the streets expecting that the other side is going to be violent, and that raises the emotional pitch.?

?The president?s supporters and opponent have moved beyond polarization, they?re now occupying separate realities.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/W3xJFtsDOhw/Islamists-anti-Morsi-protesters-end-week-on-alarming-note

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Egypt's Mursi circles wagons as trouble looms

By Tom Perry

CAIRO (Reuters) - President Mohamed Mursi came to office promising to be a president for all Egyptians. A year into his term, the divisions deepened by his rule have pitched the nation into crisis.

As Mursi's opponents mobilize for protests aimed at toppling him, the Muslim Brotherhood man shows no sign of flinching. Instead, he is digging in, backed by Islamist allies determined to shield Mursi from what they see as an attempted coup.

That he should battle on regardless, fending off a storm of criticism which he says is personally hurtful, reflects Mursi's approach during a year in which his efforts have been obstructed by political unrest, resistance from vested interests within the state and failures by a government that seems to lack vision.

As hopes for consensus have faded, Mursi has ploughed on regardless, casting his opponents as spoilers who have rejected his attempts at outreach. His allies, meanwhile, have been whittled down to Islamists at the extreme religious right.

Addressing his supporters on Wednesday, Mursi said the conflict threatened "our nascent democratic experience and threatens to put the whole nation in a state of paralysis and chaos". In a pattern seen before, he offered concessions, but these were dismissed as too little by the opposition.

"I say to the opposition: the road to change is clear," he said, alluding to elections won by the Islamists to date.

A determined man of action to his supporters and a would-be despot to his opponents, Mursi, 61, is a civil engineer and university lecturer with a doctorate from the United States. He was raised in a rural village a two-hour drive north of Cairo.

He was thrust into the presidential race when the Brotherhood's first-choice candidate was disqualified. Dismissed at first as the "spare tyre", he has grown into his role, appearing ever more confident in his public addresses.

Leaning over the podium and digressing from his written remarks during a nearly three-hour speech late on Wednesday, Mursi sought to appeal to ordinary people with a folksy style that departed from stiffer habits that were often mocked.

"He knows his primary audience is not opposition supporters or secular-minded urbanites," said Yasser El-Shimy, Egypt analyst with the International Crisis Group.

When he took office, the extent of his authority was thrown into doubt by the role of Hosni Mubarak-era generals who had established themselves as a rival source of authority.

Yet the novice president stunned observers in August when he sacked Mubarak's veteran defense minister, a move that drew grudging respect from some critics, even in the liberal camp.

FAILING TO REACH OUT

In his first weeks in office, visits to China and Iran set a new tone for Egypt's foreign policy. He also preserved Egypt's role as a vital Middle East actor by helping broker an end to a short war between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas.

The ceasefire declared from Cairo in the presence of U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reassured the West that Islamist rule did not mean a dramatic shift in a regional order underpinned by Egypt's 1979 peace treaty with Israel.

But no sooner had Mursi helped settle one international conflict than he set off another at home by issuing a decree that infuriated opponents and triggered days of lethal violence.

The decree allowed the Islamists to complete a constitution free of the risk of legal challenges. Mursi then put the controversial text to referendum, ignoring protests from non-Islamists who said it did not reflect Egypt's diversity.

The opposition condemned Mursi's constitutional decree as a power grab with echoes of the Mubarak era. The Brotherhood billed it as a pre-emptive move against a plot by old regime loyalists to obstruct the political transition.

Mursi and the Brotherhood won, but not without cost. The episode deepened the political divide, burying hopes for the consensus needed to embark on reforms to tackle an economic crisis that has sent the currency to record lows.

Talks with the International Monetary Fund on a $4.8 billion loan vital to restoring investor confidence stumbled as Mursi balked at politically-sensitive terms such as tax increases.

Even the Brotherhood spoke out publicly against Mursi's prime minister, the independent technocrat Hisham Kandil.

The government's commitment to democracy was thrown into question by laws criticized for restricting civil society and the right to protest. The United States and Europe - major donors - both expressed concern.

Critics have depicted Mursi as a puppet of the Islamist movement that launched him to power - a claim rejected by the presidency and the Brotherhood. But ex-members of the presidential staff have cited the group's interference as their reason for quitting.

"Dr Mohamed Mursi unfortunately does not have transparency, clarity in dealing with the Egyptian people," said Mohamed Habib, a former deputy leader of the Brotherhood who quit the group in 2011.

As his circle of friends tightens to groups such al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, a once-armed jihadist movement, Mursi will likely find it even harder to convince critics that he can be a president for all Egyptians and not just a party man.

"The relationship with the Egyptian people was the main shortcoming this year: the transformation from being a movement to a national political force," said a Western diplomat.

"The main mistake was the inability to speak to the nation and to engage the Egyptians into this new democratic project."

(Writing by Tom Perry; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-mursi-circles-wagons-trouble-looms-220938281.html

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Britain's shale gas firms to offer host communities sweeteners

LONDON (Reuters) - Companies that explore for shale gas in Britain have pledged to provide sweeteners worth 100,000 pounds to communities located near exploratory wells and 1 per cent of revenues from each production site, the government said on Thursday.

"Companies have pledged to engage with communities early (prior to any application for planning permission), and to provide community benefits in areas where shale is commercially extracted," the Department of Energy and Climate Change said in a statement.

"These will include 100,000 pounds for communities situated near each exploratory (hydraulically fracked) well, and 1 percent of revenues from every production site," it said.

(Reporting By John McGarrity; editing by James Jukwey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/britains-shale-gas-firms-offer-host-communities-sweeteners-105857085.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Early brain stimulation may help stroke survivors recover language function

June 27, 2013 ? Non-invasive brain stimulation may help stroke survivors recover speech and language function, according to new research in the American Heart Association journal Stroke.

Between 20 percent to 30 percent of stroke survivors have aphasia, a disorder that affects the ability to grasp language, read, write or speak. It's most often caused by strokes that occur in areas of the brain that control speech and language.

"For decades, skilled speech and language therapy has been the only therapeutic option for stroke survivors with aphasia," said Alexander Thiel, M.D., study lead author and associate professor of neurology and neurosurgery at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. "We are entering exciting times where we might be able in the near future to combine speech and language therapy with non-invasive brain stimulation earlier in the recovery. This could result in earlier and more efficient aphasia recovery and also have an economic impact."

In the small study, researchers treated 24 stroke survivors with several types of aphasia at the rehabilitation hospital Rehanova and the Max-Planck-Institute for neurological research in Cologne, Germany. Thirteen received transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and 11 got sham stimulation.

The TMS device is a handheld magnetic coil that delivers low intensity stimulation and elicits muscle contractions when applied over the motor cortex.

During sham stimulation the coil is placed over the top of the head in the midline where there is a large venous blood vessel and not a language-related brain region. The intensity for stimulation was lower intensity so that participants still had the same sensation on the skin but no effective electrical currents were induced in the brain tissue.

Patients received 20 minutes of TMS or sham stimulation followed by 45 minutes of speech and language therapy for 10 days.

The TMS groups' improvements were on average three times greater than the non-TMS group, researchers said. They used German language aphasia tests, which are similar to those in the United States, to measure language performance of the patients.

"TMS had the biggest impact on improvement in anomia, the inability to name objects, which is one of the most debilitating aphasia symptoms," Thiel said.

Researchers, in essence, shut down the working part of the brain so that the stroke-affected side could relearn language. "This is similar to physical rehabilitation where the unaffected limb is immobilized with a splint so that the patients must use the affected limb during the therapy session," Thiel said.

"We believe brain stimulation should be most effective early, within about five weeks after stroke, because genes controlling the recovery process are active during this time window," he said.

Thiel said the result of this study opens the door to larger, multi-center trials. The NORTHSTAR study has been funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and will be launched at four Canadian sites and one German site later in 2013.

The Walter and Marga Boll and Wolf-Dieter-Heiss Foundations funded the current study.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/QC3RAuNF0D0/130627161434.htm

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Microsoft's New Camera App For Windows 8.1 Lets You Take Photo Sphere-Like Panoramas

With its Windows 8.1 Preview, Microsoft today also launched a new version of its camera app. For the most part, the app hasn't really changed all that much, but Microsoft has added a cool (though derivative) new feature to the app: panoramas. Given the company's history with these apps, starting with PhotoSynth many years ago, this doesn't really come as a surprise, though it is surprising that Microsoft would first launch this feature on Windows 8.1 and not on Windows Phone.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/CiUQMh53614/

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What Happens When You Buy Assets Down 80%? ? Mebane Faber ...

We?ve done a lot of articles on value and drawdowns on the blog before (search the archives). ?I was curious what happens when you bought the US equity sectors back when they were really hammered (French Fama to 1920s). ?

Average 3 year nominal returns when buying a sector down since 1920s:

60% = 57%

70% = 87%

80% = 172%

90% = 240%

?

Average 3 year nominal returns when buying an industry down?since 1920s:

60% = 71%

70% = 96%

80% = 136%

90% = 115%

?

Average 3 year nominal returns when buying a country?down?since 1970s:

60% = 107%

70% = 116%

80% = 118%

90% = 156%

?

It?s hard to buy something down 80%, especially if you owned it when it was down 30, 50, then 80%. ?But usually that is a great time to be wading in?Some recent examples of assets that have gotten clobbered include tech in 2002, homebuilders in 2009, and Greece and (Junior) Gold Miners now. ?

Source: http://www.mebanefaber.com/2013/06/25/what-happens-when-you-buy-assets-down-80/

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Simple two-drug combination proves effective in reducing risk of stroke

June 26, 2013 ? Results of a Phase III clinical trial showed that a simple drug regimen of two anti-clotting drugs -- clopidogrel and aspirin -- lowered the risk of stroke by almost one-third, compared to the standard therapy of aspirin alone, when given to patients who had minor or transient stroke symptoms to prevent subsequent attacks.

Described this week in the New England Journal of Medicine (July 4, 2013 print issue), the clinical trial was conducted at multiple sites in China and designed in partnership with a physician at UC San Francisco.

The trial involved 5,170 people who were hospitalized after suffering minor ischemic strokes or stroke-like events known as transient ischemic attacks, or TIAs, in which blood flow to the brain is briefly blocked. All patients were randomized into two groups and treated for three months with either aspirin alone or aspirin plus clopidogrel, which is marketed as Plavix. The three-month period following stroke is considered the most critical for medical intervention.

Overall, 8.2 percent of patients taking both drugs suffered subsequent strokes in the three months of follow-up compared to 11.7 percent of patients taking aspirin alone.

"The results were striking," said S. Claiborne Johnston, MD, PhD, a professor of neurology and associate vice chancellor of research at UCSF who was a senior author on the study.

The Chinese trial, called CHANCE (Clopidogrel in High-risk Patients with Acute Non-disabling Cerebrovascular Events), is nearly identical to a National Institutes of Health-sponsored trial that is already enrolling patients in the United States, including at UCSF, called POINT (Platelet-Oriented Inhibition in New TIA and Minor Ischemic Stroke).

"If POINT confirms CHANCE, then we're done -- the two-drug combination becomes the standard of care," said Johnston. "Anybody with a transient ischemic attack or minor stroke will get clopidogrel plus aspirin."

The POINT trial is important, said Johnston, because genetics, risk factors, and medical practice differences could all lead to differences in trial results in China compared to other countries. Johnston is the principal investigator of the POINT trial.

Stroke in China and the United States

Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide and is the fourth leading cause of death in the United States.

More than 795,000 people in the United States have strokes every year, and, in 2008 alone, some 133,000 cases were fatal, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Another 300,000 people in the United States have TIAs each year.

Many strokes are minor -- shorter in duration than a full-blown stroke and usually have no lingering health impacts. In China, for instance, about 3 million new strokes occur every year, and about 30 percent of them are minor.

The protocol for the CHANCE trial was developed by Johnston and colleagues at Tiantan Hospital in China. The lead author of the study was Yongjun Wang, MD, of Beijing Tiantan Hospital.

China has many times more people who have strokes every year than the United States because of the size of the population and higher stroke rates, which allowed investigators to screen 41,561 patients in just three years at the 114 clinical sites, and enroll 5,170 patients in the trial.

Increased Risk of Subsequent Stroke

The reason for minor attacks is much the same as a full-blown stroke: a blood clot causes a blockage in the blood vessels that feed oxygen-rich blood to the brain. But in patients with TIAs and many minor strokes, the clot quickly goes away, usually in a few minutes, due to the natural mechanisms in the human body that are designed to deal with such clots.

However, in the weeks following a TIA or minor stroke, there is great risk that another clot will form, causing additional strokes -- potentially major ones. About 10 to 20 percent of people who have a TIA or minor stroke go on to have a subsequent stroke within three months.

Because of this risk, the first 90 days after a stroke or TIA is the most critical window for medical intervention. Currently, people who have minor strokes or TIAs are initially treated with aspirin alone. The purpose of the CHANCE trial was to determine whether clopidogrel with aspirin was more effective than aspirin alone in this intervention.

The drugs basically work the same way. They are "antiplatelet" agents, which target clotting agents found in the bloodstream know as platelets, preventing their aggregation. The combination is used commonly in patients who have heart attacks, but there has been no adequate clinical data to suggest it would work in stroke.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/df9E4AC9RSc/130626184021.htm

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Singer Chris Brown charged in hit-and-run traffic accident

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - R&B singer Chris Brown, on probation for beating his former girlfriend, was charged on Tuesday with a hit-and-run and driving without a valid license in connection with a May 21 traffic accident in Los Angeles.

Brown, 24, allegedly rear-ended another car and faces up to six months in jail on each misdemeanor charge, L.A. City Attorney spokesman Frank Mateljan said. He will be arraigned in Los Angeles Superior Court on July 15, Mateljan said.

Brown called the charges "ridiculous" on Twitter and posted a photo of the car he said was involved in the accident, saying it was "just a dirty car."

"It's not a hit and run if u get out the car, exchange information (who has NO DAMAGE to either cars). This is really ridiculous," he wrote on Twitter.

"I have a valid drivers (sic) license and I gave the woman the right info. She saw cameras and wanted to make a scene," Brown said. "I will not stand for this bullying and yellow journalism!"

The "Kiss Kiss" singer was sentenced to five years probation, 180 days of community service and domestic violence counseling after pleading guilty to beating singer Rihanna on the eve of the 2009 Grammy Awards in Los Angeles.

Brown, also accused by prosecutors of having cut corners on his court-ordered community service, could be sent to prison if a judge decides that he violated the terms of his probation, which is being handled by a Los Angeles County court.

"We will forward the violation on to the county district attorney and they will handle it from there," Mateljan said.

Los Angeles County District Attorney spokeswoman Jane Robison said the office was aware of the charges against Brown but had yet to receive them from the city. "When we are informed by the city attorney, we will consider it," Robison said.

Brown has been involved in a number of highly publicized altercations, including a night club brawl with rapper Drake last year and a fight with R&B singer Frank Ocean outside a West Hollywood, California, recording studio in January.

(Reporting by Eric Kelsey, Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy and Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/singer-chris-brown-charged-hit-run-traffic-accident-192421612.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Live coverage of George Zimmerman murder trial

DEAR ABBY: I was taken away from my parents at 13 and placed into foster care, where I stayed until I aged out at 21. My biological mother is a drug addict who abandoned me to my father when I was 11. She never tried to contact me while I was in care.I am now 24 and she won't leave me alone. She sends Facebook messages that alternate between begging me to let her get to know me, and condemning me for being vindictive and not having forgiveness in my heart. Abby, this woman exposed me to drugs and all manner of seedy people and situations. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/george-zimmerman-murder-trial--live-video-and-chat-222843188.html

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Rare giant catfish faces new threat in Southeast Asia's Mekong

Laos' controversial Xayaburi dam could bring the Giant Catfish to extinction, as well as devastate the Mekong River's other fisheries. The challenge: How to build a dam that allows a 600-pound fish to swim up stream?

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 22, 2013

Two Thai fishermen show a 293-kilogram (646-pound) giant catfish they caught from the Mekong River in Chiang Khong district of Chiang Rai province, northern Thailand in 2005.

Suthep Kritsanavarin/AP

Enlarge

The Giant Catfish is an enormous fish with thin, down-turned lips that give it a lonely look. And such a "mournful" visage is not unwarranted.

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Already one of the most endangered fish in the world, a new study has found that a dam underway in Laos could push it to extinction.?

So rare that it is nearly a legend of the Mekong River?s depths, the Giant Catfish belongs to the?shark catfish family and reach upwards of 600 pounds and some 10 feet in length. The brobdingnagian?fish has dwindled in number an estimated 90 percent over the past 20 years ???possibly to just a few hundred animals, though tracking the elusive fish is difficult. It is now found only in the lower Mekong, which runs like a mud-colored vein carrying the economic lifeblood of Southeast Asia through Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam. In recent years, though, progress had been made in rescuing Giant Catfish fish from extinction, as those five countries introduced new protections that banned fishing it.

Now, Laos's controversial Xayaburi dam threatens to undo that.

?The Giant Catfish is endangered, but there?s still a chance for it, and all the countries involved have gotten on board to restrict fishing ? but just when we solved one problem we?re now facing this new one,? says Zeb Hogan, the?study?s author and associate research professor at the University of Nevada,?in a telephone interview.

The Xayabari, the first dam in the lower Mekong, will if finished block the Giant Catfish from making its lifecycle migration from the floodplain rearing areas to upstream spawning sites in northern Laos and Thailand, the study said. The dam could also alter Mekong flows, disrupting the natural cues the fish needs to spawn.

This is not the first warning that the Xayabari project could mean the end for the Giant Catfish. Two years ago, the Mekong River Commission???an advisory body established in 1995 as part of an agreement between five Southeast Asian countries on the development of the Mekong ??convened a panel of experts who concluded that the dam would obstruct the migrations of some 23 to 100 species of fish, including the Great Catfish. The panel recommended a 10-year hold on the Xayaburi project, pending more information on how the dam would affect the river?s ecology.

"The gaps in knowledge on the number of migratory fish species, their biomass and their ability to successfully pass a dam and reservoir leads to considerable uncertainty about the scale of impact on fisheries and associated livelihoods, both locally and in a transboundary context," the report said.

But in November 2012, Laos officially began what is expected to be seven years of construction of the Xayabari dam, the first in several controversial dams planned for the lower Mekong.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/CCrYxnsRm6U/Rare-giant-catfish-faces-new-threat-in-Southeast-Asia-s-Mekong

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Obese Americans confront 'brutal' disease

Hearing his doctor utter the "o" word pushed Steven Bryan to shed weight.

At 6 feet and 287 pounds, he was morbidly obese, his doctor warned him in November 2011. That news forced the 50-year-old Anaheim, Calif., resident to re-examine his habits. He made some changes, dropped below 250 and now hovers around 257. His body mass index, however, is 34.9, which, according to the medical establishment, still makes him obese.

?I'm fat, and it's my fault,? Bryan says.

It?s no surprise, then, that he criticizes last week?s decision by the American Medical Association to classify obesity as a disease. Some experts say the decision increases the chance that doctors and insurance companies could more effectively treat the 78 million adults and 12 million children in the United States with BMIs above 30.

Steven Bryan (Photo courtesy of Steven Bryan)

To Bryan, that wrongly fashions the medical establishment as a crutch?one with more meds and more billings for more doctor appointments.

He is one of several obese Americans who wrote this week on Yahoo News about their struggles with weight and their views on the AMA?s declaration. To see how they perceive their condition?described as ?a disability,? ?a disease,? ?a choice,? ?a wake-up call? or simply ?a challenge??we asked them the following questions: Does the AMA?s definition alter their outlook on obesity? Does calling it a disease help or hinder their personal weight battles? Is this a positive or negative step in battling the country?s bulge?

Bryan says the answer is clear. ?The AMA's declaration is nothing more than a happy pill designed to make overweight people like myself shift the blame for our own bad habits,? he writes.

?I ate what I wanted when I wanted: cookies, ice cream, chips, and other comfort foods. I overindulged to fill emotional voids in my life. In many ways, I followed the guidelines of Miss Piggy, the Muppet who said, ?Never eat anything you can?t lift.??

The key, he says, was his ?obnoxious and brutally honest? doctor, who encouraged him to trade in cookies for carrots.

He adds that his doctor had him recite what he ate the previous day and explained how his choices?for instance, ?an innocent bowl of unsweetened cereal? for breakfast?boosted the chance he?d snack immediately when arriving at work.

He now eats in moderation. He notes the occasional chocolate-frosted doughnut is OK and, importantly, his choice.

?The AMA gets a big fat ?F? from me for their enabling declaration,? Bryan says. ?If I want to change [my life], it's up to me. Over the last year, I made some lifestyle changes and have been keeping my weight under control, but I have more work to do.?

Alyce Wilson and her son (Photo courtesy of Alyce Wilson)

Can a ?squishier? physique possibly be contagious?

Alyce Wilson plugged her numbers into a BMI calculator and read the result: 32.6.

?Imagine my joy when I learned that,? she says in jest.

So, she rounded up her actual height by a half-inch, to 5 foot 5 inches. ?Hey, I had to try,? she says.

Her BMI fell slightly?to 31.6. ?Depending on which height I use, I'd have to lose 10 to 15 pounds just to be considered overweight.?

Wilson, a 42-year-old mom who lives in Philadelphia, is on the fence about the obesity designation. She writes somewhat tongue in cheek that her newfound obesity ?disease? is a chronic condition that could kill her if left untreated.

The cause of her condition? Bad genes? Too many muffins? An out-of-whack thyroid? Nope.

?Much as I love him, I have my toddler to blame,? she says.

Before her pregnancy, Wilson dropped 70 pounds over five years and kept if off. ?But I was not one of those pregnant women who look like a snake that swallowed a basketball,? she says. ?I packed on 58 pounds and became an ancient fertility figure.?

Now, three years after the birth of her son, she?s halfway to losing her ?baby fat,? as she calls it. ?If only reading books aloud or changing diapers burned more calories.?

And when she plugged her numbers into the BMI calculator, she worried about what her ?squishier? composition will entail.

?What will this new ?disease? designation mean? Will people avoid me, fearing my fat is contagious?? she asks. ?It's also startling?and annoying?to learn I'm no longer considered healthy, especially when that isn't true. Two years ago, growing frustrated with the glacial pace of my postpartum weight loss, I consulted my physician. She ran a series of diagnostic tests that determined I was in the healthy range for everything she tested. Some obese people have associated health problems, but I'm not one of them.?

She does hope, however, that the AMA?s decision will expand coverage for weight-loss treatments and prevention and increase insurers? leeway.

?I'm cautiously optimistic,? Wilson says.

Laura Cushing (Photo courtesy of Laura Cushing)

Looking forward to a healthy future?with assistance

Tagging obesity as a choice ignores its complexity, Laura Cushing says.

Cushing, 43, carries 324 pounds on her nearly 6-foot frame. She?s down from 390 three years ago. ?While morbid obesity doesn't have a pleasant ring to it,? the West Berlin, N.J., resident writes, ?it's certainly preferable to some of the names I've been called in reference to my body size.?

Compounding her frustration over losing weight are the myriad costs. See the doctor? That?s a co-pay. Meet with a nutritionist? Another co-pay. Blood tests and body exams set her back even more. Weight Watchers, at $65 for three months of online tools and $15 for in-person meetings, is too pricey. The $400 annual gym membership is out of her budget.

And because Cushing is unsure about the exact cause of her being overweight, losing the pounds hasn?t been easy.

?Is my obesity a ?self-inflicted? disease?? she asks. ?I can pinpoint a number of factors: My father and his side of the family were all obese, meaning it is partially genetic. I have had limited access to healthy foods at times during my life that doubtlessly contributed. I suffered a crippling car accident that impeded my ability to be active for quite a while. And, yes, there's also just that I enjoy eating and haven't always made the best choices.?

She thus welcomes a change in how the country views obesity. ?But other steps are needed,? she argues. ?Education, individual action, and community support must be achieved as well. I am hoping that instead of pushing an agenda of diet drugs and surgeries, there will be more focus on treatments that include healthy eating and exercise.?

?It is a slow process,? she acknowledges.

Read more stories about personal battles with obesity:

Obesity's classified as a disease, but losing weight is on me

My obesity is my disease and my problem

Obesity disease classification will lead to overmedication

Does your BMI make you ill?

Being called fat was bad enough; now I am obese

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/m-fat-fault-other-reactions-calling-obesity-disease-185246512.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Self Employed Loans - Payday Loans No Checks

Introduction:

Individuals who don't have regular income and run their own business can might arise in need of funds. Self employed loans help those people who work on their own and don't possess any stable income to show as a proof. These loans are available to people who work for themselves and maybe having difficulty in proving their income for some reason. The persons who don't have stagnant income and their income varies from one month to another can avail easy funds. You can acquire the loan amount from these loans to expand the existing business or to start up the new one to earn maximum and avail benefits. It is also a great help provider for unusual circumstances.

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Features:

The greatest feature of self employed loans UK is its online procedure. The loan application get processed quickly and the money once get approved made available as soon as possible for you to spend as you wish. If you are a self employed and looking for a loan or external financial help, go for self employed loans which are easy to avail and repaid. Unsecured loans for self employed have two forms. Secured option needs collateral. You have to place any asset as the security against the loan. If you cannot repay the loan, the lender can sell it to recover his money. For short term requirement of money, unsecured option is the perfect option to avail which does not need any collateral. Online applications make you available the cash in your account within 24 hours. Borrower with bad credit or adverse records is also applicable to apply. The application procedure is easy and simple with instant and quick response. The borrowed amount can help them to get rid of financial crisis.

Requirements:

The individuals need to follow up certain required specifications to get applicable for the availment of loan amount from loans for self employed people. Such as:

1. The candidate who needs to apply for this loan should be a permanent citizen of UK.
2. He should be self employed.
3. He should be an adult with the age of 18 years or more.
4. He should be having some source of income to be able to get repay the loan amount on time.
5. He should have bank account which should not be less than six months old.
6. He should be having permanent residential address in UK itself.


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Source: http://peripeciasdatatah.blogspot.com/2013/06/self-employed-loans-simple-source-of.html

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Jonathan Cheban: Thrilled for Kim Kardashian!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/jonathan-cheban-thrilled-for-kim-kardashian/

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No 'Turkish spring': Protests in Turkey are sign of a healthy democracy

Protests in Turkey aren?t a sign of the failure of democracy there but a sign that Turkish politics is now resilient enough to experience public discontent that strengthens participatory democracy. But?if Recep Tayyip Erdogan?remains insensitive to public opinion, it will cost him his job.

By Graham E. Fuller,?Op-ed contributor / June 17, 2013

Police fire tear gas and a water canon at demonstrators who refused to leave Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, yesterday after authorities evicted activists from Gezi Park. Op-ed contributor Graham E. Fuller writes: 'The politics of polarization and venomous congressional deadlock in the US does not exactly provide a model of smooth political process' for Turkey.

AP

Enlarge

It?s easy to characterize the disorders in Istanbul?s Gezi Park and elsewhere in Turkey as a ?Turkish spring? ? mass demands for democracy in yet another Middle East country. But these tumultuous events, rather than a sign of failure of democracy in Turkey, might demonstrate quite the opposite ? an affirmation of the further maturing of Turkish politics, now resilient enough to experience periods of public discontent that actually strengthen participatory democracy.

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Wishful thinking? Not quite. There are multiple reasons why Taksim Square is worlds apart from Egypt?s Tahrir Square, not least of which is that the demonstrations are not against some entrenched dictatorship, but against a prime minister who has won three successive free and fair elections. No other Turkish prime minister has ever accomplished that.

No, the problem can be more accurately described as a reaction against Recep Tayyip Erdogan?s prime ministerial high-handedness that in part stems from political fatigue ? even arrogance ? after 10 long years of power, and other social grievances. Mr. Erdogan has simply stepped on a lot of toes by now and seems increasingly tone-deaf and imperious in the face of public discontent with many of his policies. If he remains insensitive to a large segment of public opinion, it will cost him his job, and maybe even bring down his party in the next elections.

Erdogan won office by gaining widespread public support, not just from religious-minded Turks, but also from liberal and intellectual circles that approve of his skillful victory over the long-time military domination of Turkish politics and greater liberalization. He has transformed the Turkish economy, making it the 17th-largest economy in the world. He has introduced major political, economic, and social reforms while zealously seeking EU membership.

He has done more to move toward settlement of the long-standing and bloody Kurdish problem than any other Turkish prime minister. He has adopted a dramatically bold new foreign policy that moves Turkey away from being simply a ?faithful US ally? to being a new independent geopolitical player in its own right in the West, Middle East, Africa, and Eurasia.

But Erdogan may be running out of steam after a decade of accomplishments, and now sowing the seeds of his own destruction through impulsiveness and arrogance that have cost him much public support ? symbolized in his ill-conceived plans to ?develop? Gezi Park in Istanbul, now a symbol of many other public grievances as well.

Of course, there are many other things going on here; politics is never simple. Erdogan has his enemies. Some of the once-dominant and now displaced Kemalist ruling class would love to bring him down; so would many Turkish nationalists who stand against concessions to the large Kurdish minority that would recognize their independent cultural aspirations. The displaced army is miffed. Strong secularists resent his opening of the public sphere to Islam ? long a major no-no of the Kemalists. Corruption has grown after 10 years of power.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/KWeQTYKMNW4/No-Turkish-spring-Protests-in-Turkey-are-sign-of-a-healthy-democracy

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

Cheney: Obama 'a day late and a dollar short' on Syria | The Daily ...

Former Vice President Dick Cheney criticized the Obama administration?s handling of the Syrian situation on ?Fox News Sunday??in the wake of ?President Bashar al-Assad?s use of chemical weapons.

Cheney suggested the United States missed its opportunity, and was unsure if al-Assad?s use of chemical weapons justified U.S. involvement if the deaths of 93,000 people already killed in the conflict did not justify it.

?I don?t think it?s been well handled,? Cheney said. ?I will be the first to admit it?s a complex, difficult situation. I frankly think John McCain has it just about right. John and I don?t always agree on everything. We have had our debates over the years but I think John has pretty well nailed it. Now we are to the point where it?s hard to understand that it?s the use of chemical weapons that triggered this result. As John said the other day, well, there were 93,000 people killed not affected by chemical weapons. Where was the concern then? It?s not clear to me what the mission is here, or they understand the mission.?

?Is it strictly humanitarian?? he continued. ?Is it geo-strategic? Does the United States have a vested interest in the outcome? Are we potentially involved in some kind of proxy war with the Soviets or the Russians, excuse me, who are supporting Assad? I think it is important that Assad go down. I think ? my instinct would have been to support the opposition sooner. You had an opportunity, if you cared about it, if it was in fact in the national interest. You had an opportunity earlier to provide support without having to get American forces directly involved and they took a pass. Now they are going to do it. But the question is whether or not they are a day late and a dollar short.?

Cheney endorsed the idea of a no-fly zone, but said that move by the United States would present problems and the question should be asked if it is in our national interests to get that involved.

?Jack Keane said the other day on the network ? that from a military standpoint of being able to accomplish something objectively that might well provide success, the no-fly zone, is what he would recommend,? Cheney said. ?That?s not without potential cost, obviously. Syria has a fairly sophisticated anti-air capability, sophisticated ground-to-air missiles. So it?s a problem. But again, I think it?s important for the administration to come back and specify what is the U.S. national interest here? And seems to be the only reason you?re going is now you have evidence that they used chemical weapons and killed 150 people with chemical weapons, is that our national interest? And I?m not sure they got it straight in their own minds what our objective is.?

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Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/06/16/cheney-obama-administration-may-be-a-day-late-and-a-dollar-short-on-syria/

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Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Daily Roundup for 06.06.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/06/the-daily-roundup-for-06-06-2013/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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